Brickman A S, Massry S G, Coburn J W
J Clin Invest. 1972 Apr;51(4):945-54. doi: 10.1172/JCI106889.
Studies were undertaken in man to evaluate the roles of volume depletion and of the parathyroid glands in mediating the changes in serum and urinary calcium which follow the administration of hydrochlorothiazide, 100 mg twice daily, for 4 days, 42 studies were carried out in 16 normal subjects, 9 patients with hyperparathyroidism, and 7 vitamin D-treated subjects with hypoparathyroidism. In six studies in normal subjects, daily sodium losses during thiazide administration were quantitatively replaced, and in six other studies the effect of equivalent sodium losses produced by furosemide was evaluated. Although the magnitude of sodium losses was similar in three groups during therapy with thiazides, urinary calcium fell and urinary phosphorus increased significantly only in normal subjects and those with hyperparathyroidism; no change occurred in patients with hypoparathyroidism. With the replacement of the thiazide-induced sodium losses by NaCl in normals, urinary calcium did not change as urinary sodium increased 4- to 5-fold. Furosemide administration produced similar sodium losses while urinary calcium remained at or above control levels. After correction for changes in plasma protein concentration caused by thiazide-induced hemoconcentration, mean levels of serum calcium were significantly increased only in subjects with hyperparathyroidism and vitamin D-treated patients with hypoparathyroidism. The results indicate that both depletion of extracellular fluid volume and the presence of the parathyroid glands are necessary for the decrease in urinary calcium in response to thiazide therapy. Both the reduction in urinary calcium and increase in urinary phosphate after the use of thiazides may be due, in part, to potentiation of the action of the parathyroid hormone on the nephron. The rise in serum calcium could be due to thiazide-induced release of calcium from bone into extracellular fluid, particularly in states where bone resorption may be augmented, i.e., vitamin D therapy or hyperparathyroidism.
开展了人体研究,以评估血容量减少和甲状旁腺在介导服用氢氯噻嗪(每日两次,每次100毫克,共4天)后血清和尿钙变化中的作用。对16名正常受试者、9名甲状旁腺功能亢进患者和7名接受维生素D治疗的甲状旁腺功能减退受试者进行了42项研究。在对正常受试者的6项研究中,噻嗪类药物给药期间的每日钠流失量得到了定量补充,在另外6项研究中评估了呋塞米产生的等量钠流失的影响。虽然在使用噻嗪类药物治疗期间三组的钠流失量相似,但仅在正常受试者和甲状旁腺功能亢进患者中尿钙下降且尿磷显著增加;甲状旁腺功能减退患者未出现变化。在正常受试者中用氯化钠替代噻嗪类药物引起的钠流失时,随着尿钠增加4至5倍,尿钙并未改变。给予呋塞米产生了相似的钠流失量,而尿钙保持在或高于对照水平。校正由噻嗪类药物引起的血液浓缩导致的血浆蛋白浓度变化后,仅甲状旁腺功能亢进受试者和接受维生素D治疗的甲状旁腺功能减退患者的血清钙平均水平显著升高。结果表明,细胞外液容量减少和甲状旁腺的存在对于噻嗪类药物治疗引起的尿钙减少都是必要的。使用噻嗪类药物后尿钙减少和尿磷增加可能部分归因于甲状旁腺激素对肾单位作用的增强。血清钙升高可能是由于噻嗪类药物诱导钙从骨释放到细胞外液中,特别是在骨吸收可能增强的状态下,即维生素D治疗或甲状旁腺功能亢进。